China locks down town on Myanmar border amid fresh COVID-19 outbreak
BEIJING — Chinese authorities have locked down a city bordering Myanmar, shutting most businesses and requiring residents to stay at home as a fresh outbreak of COVID-19 expanded in the area.
Two more cases were confirmed by the end of Wednesday, bringing the total to 23 in the city of Ruili over the last four days, health authorities in southwestern Yunnan province said.
The lockdown shuttered all businesses and public institutions except hospitals, pharmacies and essential shops such as grocery stores, according to a notice posted online. It affects the urban part of Ruili, which like most Chinese cities includes surrounding rural areas in its jurisdiction.
Myanmar is battling a large outbreak with limited resources to contain it. The Southeast Asian nation reported 3,602 new cases in the last 24 hours, state media said Wednesday, its highest daily total since the pandemic began.
Ruili lies across a river from the city of Muse in Myanmar’s Shan state. Chinese anti-coronavirus measures have dealt a blow to trade between the two countries, China’s state-owned Global Times newspaper reported earlier this week.
Authorities had already banned unnecessary travel in and out of Ruili on Monday, after the first cases were reported.
Lab tests and real-world experience offer reassuring evidence that COVID-19 vaccines offer a high level of protection against the Delta variant.
All the cases have been reported in a Ruili community on the border called Jiegao, which has been designated a high-risk area. They include both Chinese and Myanmar nationals. The latest cases were discovered during mass testing, and authorities said they would step up border controls.
Elsewhere in China, 52 people who arrived on a flight from Afghanistan five days ago tested positive for the coronavirus, the Hubei provincial health commission said. Thirty have been classified as confirmed COVID-19 cases, while the other 22 did not show any symptoms. China does not include asymptomatic cases in its official tally.
The July 2 Xiamen Air flight flew from Kabul, the Afghan capital, to Wuhan, the central Chinese city hit hard by the virus after it was first detected there in late 2019.
China has regularly imported cases from travelers, but usually in smaller numbers. Virtually all people arriving in China must quarantine for two weeks in a designated hotel.
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Ruili launched a campaign to vaccinate the entire city in April following an outbreak in March.
China has relied on a tough lockdown strategy and mass testing to tamp down outbreaks, even as it has stepped up the pace of vaccinations. Central health officials have said they want to vaccinate 80% of the population.
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